To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

f7 _ jfl the weather m jha Chicago and vlclnlty unsettled f l^v but generally fair weather satur fc $\ v/wf day and sunday slightly warmer y^if saturday moderate southerly jjjj vol viii no 232 a m Chicago examiner saturday Chicago september 17 1910 16 pages saturday jl want a job if lurta read the examiner help wanted ads yi>jl f sf openings of all kinds are constantly c vj s advertised in these columns call y/j v \ at examiner employment exchange j t j jr ttle can place you Â® reslrterwj in price one cent delivered by carrier c b patent offlc rmull vwwa v-i-i gq centa per month 3 indicted for $ 173,000 theft say jurors third true bill suppressed is belief fitzgerald would whisper name sims denials ' offset samuel peterson federal in quisitor in subtreasury case tells of triple accusation that the federal government asked for nd obtained from the february grand jury three secret indictments instead of two in connection with the theft of 173,000 from the Chicago subtreasury for which george w fitzgerald alone has been arrested on a belated warrant was strongly indicated yesterday when the examiner again can vassed the members of the february jury the inquiry among the grand jurors was made to further support the examiner's exclusive news published yesterday that a secret indictment had been voted against arthur r boal former currency clerk a nephew of frank c russell cashier of the gubtreasury who resigned shortly after fitzgerald was discharged from the treas ury service this was made necessary by united states attorney sims statement that only one man had been indicted and arrested technically mr sims spoke the truth only one man â€” fitzgerald has been in dicted and arrested but boal although not yet arrested was indicted so mr sims ingenuous statement while truthful was decidedly misleading the name on the third secret indictment cannot be made public at this time but several grand jurors are certain that they indicted three men for the reason that they could not be sure just who was guilty the fact of the voting of the boal indictment was confirmed from several grand jury sources peterson tells of three indictments samuel peterson of dekalb 111 a mem ber of the february grand jury was the first to telv of a third indictment in the bubtreasury rowbery i am positive there were three indict ments he said last night there was fitzgerald and boal and the third name i do not remember the reason we indicted three was because we could not be sure just who was guilty try juror heilman who will probably remember the name william p heilman was found at his home in joliet and said others may not appreciate the duties of a grand juror but i do the doings of a grand jury are not public property and i won't discuss the indictments we brought juror john whalen of waukegan said i remember indicting fitzgerald and boal but i am not sure about a third when told of juror peterson's positive statement he added come to think it over i believe there was a third indictment here are the statements of some of the other grand jurors who were seen yester frank b lambert 1525 addison street i ibelieve boal was indicted by the feb ruary grand jury of which i was a mem daniel mcgrath ottawa 111 i am fairly positive that we indicted both fitz gerald and boal upholds examiner's story burton e livingston 4212 north forty second street i will not say anything because i can't say anything that would detract from the examiner's story henry becker harvey 111 i won't deny or affirm that boal was indicted it might spoil the case besides nothing has beeu proved against fitzgerald cornelius j hyland 4104 kenmore ave nue i see sims denies it they being se cret indictments seth nurton piano iii i think there were others indicted it is hard work to remember as to most of the cases i paid little attention emil eichorst downer's grove 111 i will not deny that boal was indictea i was called down to-day for talking yes terday district attorney edwin sims was ob tlously displeased that a report of boat's indictment was abroad he said to an ex aminer reporter the government's case stands on the fitzgerald indictment no other warrants have been issued it is obviously improper for the district attorney the grand jurors or even the court to talk about an indict ment that has been marked suppressed for service all i can say is that we will go ahead with the case against fitzger at the union hotel where boal makes his home when in Chicago it was stated yesterday he was traveling for the shot well manufacturing compainy of Chicago his employers stated that he was at pres ent in san antonio texas on business for the company george w fitzgerald yesterday talked freely of the charges against him and dis cussed arthur r boal's connection with the case i was surprised to hear that there was a secret indictment out against boal mid fizgerald i never believed that he itak the 173,000 though it is true that he had a key which would give him access to my cage the man i suspect whose name i am willing to whisper to judge landis is not boal young boal was a 1,200 a year clerk runaway aeroplane mows down spectators eight injured at wisconsin state fair when hoxsey's machine flies into crowd milwaukee wls sept 16 eight persons flve women and three men were more or less seriously injured when aviator hoxsey's wright aeroplane swerved sidelong from its course above the race track and plunged into the crowd on the cement platform tiefore the grandstand at the state fair this afternoon the aviator was uninjured and the ma chine but slightly damaged it was a gust of wind from the south east that caused the accident i had bare ly left the ground when a gust of wind dented my left plane said hoxsey after the accident there was the grandstand on my right full of people and i felt the aeroplane going right into them i turned off the power and landed on the cement sidewalk in front of the grandstand where there were the fewest people the accident proves that i was right in my complaints about the poor grounds for starting and landing in the contract with the fair people it was stipulated that a proper place should be provided for me to start and land but when i came here i found that this had not been prepared the injured are r w roenitz oshxosh bruised about head j w jackson colored milwaukee left leg cut frank lynch neilsville left leg bruised i mrs john lynch delavan knee bruised and side injured miss fuller oshkosh severely bruised about head mrs sklng baraboo severe shock able to return home mrs alfred b morrison milwaukee ; struck on head and body bruised mrs john bowers corliss injured about head face and arms and perhaps inter nally 899 forgotten 20 years richard croker's lapse of memory is discovered by bank's ad ts'ew york sept 16.-there is 899.96 lying in the union square branch of the corn exchange bank waiting for richard croker of wantage england to come and take it away it has lain there unclaimed since 1890 mr croker having forgotten apparently that he possessed it the bank has sent mr croker notices to come and claim his coin bat he puid no attention to them it waft only when they published his name in thÂ«-"list of persons with unclaimed deposits in the bank that one of mr croker's sons appeared and annonnced that he would arrange to have his father make claim to the money the amount to the credit of the former tam many chieftain was the largest in the advertised list prepare u s sugar war wickersham and wise confer on drastic suit against trust new york sept 16 attorney general wiekersham and the united states dis trict attorney henry a wise had a pro longed conference this afternoon at the headquarters of the bar association con cerning it is said the complaint in an action to be brought by the government for the dissolution of the american sugar refining company this complaint will be much broader in its scope than the sherman anti-trust com plaint which was based on the civil suit for 30,000,000 damages instituted by the pennsylvania sugar refining company against the american sugar refining com pany after the closing of the philadelphia refinery lane is rate judge here grants manufacturers plea to sup plant examiners in inquiry washington d c sept 16.â€”com missioner franklin k lane has been assigned by the interstate commerce com mission to preside at the Chicago hearing in the advance freight rate cases when it is resumed monday the assignment was requested of president Taft by the Illinois manufacturers association who asked that a commissioner and not examiners be present commissioner lane stated that although it was intended by the commission to give a final hearing in the cases to remove all occasion for com plaint no would personally conduct the hearing la follette is stricken operation on senator probable out come of trip to rochester st paul minn sept 16 senator robert m la follette is suffering with an ailment that probably will require an op eration according to james a frear secretary of state of wisconsin who is in minneapolis to-day the senator will go to rochester to consult with the doc tors mayo mr frear says la follette re turned home after congress adjourned a sick man and that he then consulted phy sicians about his condition he was told that rest was all he needed and he ob tained as much as he could until he was plunged into the campaign bomb laid for kaiser explosive is found on track ahead of royal train special cable to the examiner berlin sept 16 â€” a dispatch to the morgen post from funfkirchen hungary says that a bomb was discovered yester day lying on the railroad track in front of the train bearing emperor william to the hunting lodge at mohacs it did iiot explode poet le gallienne sued by paris wife helpmeet former writer now milliner to support child asks for decree separated several years mate delayed action long contemplated following his residence in u s nbw york sept 16 richard le gal lienne the english poet who has been hying here since 1898 is being sued for divorce it is expected the case will be tried soon the information came from paris where mrs le gallienne has a mil linery shop her counsel lyle e malnn of this city to-day admitted serving the summons it is understood the suit is based on evidence gathered last december rumors regarding the poet reached his wife in paris and she had an investigation made she is the poet's second wife and was miss julie narregard of an old danish family she was married to le gallienne in 189t after the death of his first wife she had made a name as a writer but after she left the poet she went to paris with her little daughter under the name of mme fedora and opned the millinery shop child delayed wife's suit paris sept 16 mrs le gallienne was surprised when informed to-night that her suit for divorce had become known in new york she said : this is the first news i have received that legal action has been taken although i have been in consultation with my new york lawyer for some time my husband and i have been separated a number of years my only reason for not seeking a divorce before was that i wished to assure myself of legal possession of otir child who is now with me there is nothing sensational attached to the suit and noth ing secret about it i do not expect my husband to contest friends believed pair divorced the only surprise occasioned among mrs le gallienne's many friends here is that she dii not begin suit before indeed many persons believed she had divorced the poet as she had been living with htrj young daughter in paris for about six j years his first wife left him one child a daughter who is now with his relatives in england the second wife after the saparation supported this child as long as her resources permitted mrs le gallienne's brother is a leading lawyer in denmark she is beautiful and her artistic tastes have mafle her many friends here g o p snubs roosevelt colonel not invited to address na tional league's dinner new york sept 16 c01 roosevelt's name does not appear upon the list of dis tinguished guests invited to address the national republican league at its hotel astor banquet october 1 president Taft is to be the guest of honor and will de liver the only address expected from him during the new york campaign vice president sherman roosevelt's rival for temporary chairman at the saratoga con vention and william b mckinlay old guard chairman of the republican con gressional campaign committee will also speak 1 dead 19 hurt in wreck burlington and rock island trains collide head-on in missouri holt mo sept 16 h l howard a brakeman was killed and nineteen per sons injured in a head-on collision between burlington and rock island passenger trains one mile north of here at 6:30 o'clock to-night the accident occurred on a sharp down-grade curve near a bridge a high embankment prevented the en gineers from seeing the danger until their trains were almost together the engine crews saved themselves by jumping al though oil were more or less uac'iy in jured plow for title to-day champions of fnprow to battle at political mecca before 10,000 joliet 111 sept 16 william fair weather of wheatland champion plowman of the world must fight for his title to morrow entered against him in the pro fessional sweepstakes at the annual wheatland plowing match is cyrus stark former world's champion the match which is the mecca for politicians from all parts of northern Illinois will be held on the f m culver farm two miles from plain'fleld and it is expected that 10,000 persons will attend Taft raises tutors pay , , urges college increases ami yale board will accept new haven conn sept 16.â€”presi dent Taft who is a member of the yale corporation has advanced higher salaries for the university professors for years the decisive vote on the question of rais ing the salaris will be passed at the sep tember meeting of the corporation mon day president Taft will come here and register his vote in favor of the increase there seems no doubt of the passage of the measure as president hadley of the uni versilj is Â» iso lu favor of it french theater row splits Chicago 400 circular asks that mrs m h knowles and mr and mrs j w robbins be expelled chatfi eld-taylor is hit mrs j ogden armour relied on by society leader to end bitter war Chicago society circles have been thrown into a turmoil of dissension through the withdrawal of the french theater asso ciation from its connection with the al liance francaise so bitter has grown the feud that yester day angry recriminations were hurled by one faction at the other and equally bit ter counter charges were made only the immediate intervention of mrs j ogden armour acknowledged leader of chicago's 400 it is said will quell the social dis ! turbance which it is feared will divide the society set the latest development of the trouble i was announced in a circular statement sent i out in which it was said a demand would be made to have mrs mary h knowles land mr and mrs john w robbins ex pelled from the alliance francaise for good and substantial reasons the consolidation of the french theater association the french club of Chicago and the alliance francaise was termed a misfit fusion brought about through the influence of hobart c chatfleld taylor who arrogated unto himself the leader ship of french theaters others persons of social prominence are called arbitrary antocralic authoritative and bulldozing sokol denies signature this circular was purported to have been signed by dr edward sokol who jt was alleged had the backing in the charges made of mrs harry channon mrs charles spencer williamson mrs fenton b turck mrs edward k leicht mrs george b dickson and scores or others it is an unwarranted use of my name vehemently declared dr sokol i never sent out such a letter and knew nothing about it until this evening the greatest social fight swings aronnd the french theater association although tfcer-e is considerable talk of bringing back to life the french club of Chicago in op position to the alliance francaise the climax in society circles came sev eral weeks ago when mrs armour who had assisted in the support of the frencn theater refused to take any more part in the affairs of the club owing to petty bickerings director explains row one of the directors said the french theater association was facing ruin on account of wrangling among members and the mismanagement of funds not peculations several of the directors wished har mony but thought unless certain directors were retired nothing could be done a demand was made these directors be re moved it was refused then h c chatfleld-taylor mrs jefferson jackson mrs edward lowy mrs l maclntyre mrs ralph poole mrs harold g sperling and mrs elizabeth wallice handed in their resignations arthur a aldis ralph clarkson ever ett c brown mrs john c eastman colin c h fyffe lorado Taft mrs clarence s williamson and mn william s walker remained on the board of directors these persons the general understanding is are intending to reorganize the french club of Chicago in opposition to the alliance francaise ferry crew too brave inspector declares pere marquette heroes migrht hare escaped detroit mich sept 16 the men who went down on the pere marquette in lake michigan last week were too brave according to captain c h west cott of detroit supervising inspector of steamboats he returned to-day from a trip of investigation into the sinking of the car ferry they were too brave the captain said to-day they had taken every precaution to leave the ship but stuck to then posts too long the ferry left her dock the day of the disaster ap parently in the best of condition it was declared the last inspection was made in two hours showing gross negligence this is not the case as i proved the in spectors went abroad about dinner time and worked until nine anything wrong would have been discovered had the ferry been leaking we should have known it earl cast in comedy former husband of alice thaw ap pears in london next week special cable to the examiner london sept 16 the earl of yar mouth former husband of miss alice thaw and whose exploits on the stage in new york are still fresh in memory will appear at the royal court theater next week it is only a few weeks since that the actor earl appeared on the dumlu stage in the character of a lover returned from the wars his debut will be in a comedy with music entitled the pigeon house the earl will appear under the stage name of eric hope kaiser to visit russia special cable to the examiner st petersburg sept 16 the bourse gazette announces to-day that emperor william of germany will visit st peters ftg in november . mrs ogden armour mrs everett c brown j j,hill,72,says others burdenskeep him busy rail magnate on birthday declares he's in good health will not retire st paul minn sept 16 james j hill to-day is seventy-two years old i'm feeling in good health he re marked standing erect and his eyes shin ing brightly he looked to be in splendid condition some four years ago at the state capital you said that the time had come when you would shortly drop the burden that you wanted a little time left to read some books he was reminded i said it then he replied briskly but it is not my burden that makes me work it is the burden of others mr hill was at his bfflce bright and early sometimes he reaches the office after 10 o'clock practically everybody else in the building uses the elevator bat seldom mr hill he walks up and down the stairs to consult the various sieials in charge of the different departments lincoln plan derided reading law at home waste of time says scbool dean minneapolis minn sept 16 the american boy who stays up late at night after working all day to read law with hopes of emulating abraham lincoln is wasting his time said dean william pattee : of the university of minnesota law school to-day â€” by the time a boy bad read enough law at home to be admitted to the bar he would be too old to practice he said what he would gain in three years in law school he could not learn by himself in twenty even the boy who studies in the office of one of the small town lawyers is at disadvantage and would require years of constant study before he was familiar with even basic principles of law as applied to america penny lunch in school plan advocated in st i'niil to solve problem of malnutrition st paul minn sept 16 penny lunches for pupils in the st paul schools nre practically assured according to dr e a heyerdlng medical inspector of the schools who believes the system is one of the solutions of the problem of malnutri tion among school children dr meyer ding has taken up the lunch proposition with the parents and finds sentiment fa vors the plan golf ball fells woman mrs h e teed seriously injured at jackson park by wild putt mrs h e teed 301 west sixty-fourth street was struck on the head by a golf ball and severely injured yesterday after noon while sitting on a bench in jackson park edward o dase 1382 east sixty fourth street struck the ball making a wild putt gary pays largest duty judge schedules 912,000 purchases breaking record of year new york sept 16 judge elbert h gary chairman of the board of directors of the united states steel corporation who arrived on the manretanla thnrsday night declared ll',ooo in foreign purchases the largest amount declared by any steamship passenger in more than a year end df sullivan control seen with loss of cook county elects but three members of the state central committee where he has won eight in his previous contests boss caught nappingby be ing too sure of election of candidates regarded as too weak by the voters prophets call the downstate divided antis expected to cause downfall of roger aid bauler scores victory tioger c sullivan suffered the most srrere blow of his career as dictator or jiate democratic politics at the recent pri maries when the final count showed that he had elected but three members of the state central committee from cook county heretofore he has always been able to claim at least eight from the ten congres sional districts of this county of the three men elected state central eommitteemen by the sullivan forces two were without opposition these are henry p bergen of the third district and ku gene w sullivan brother of the national committeeman in the seventh the third member james j kelly has heretofore been classed as anti-sullivan but during the fight for control of the second dis trict kelley had to call on sullivan for aid with the result that thousands of dollars were poured into the district by the demo cratic boss to defeat koy d keehn list bhows sullivan's status the following list of democratic central committeemen will show just how sullivan will fare in a roll ctll district cbmmitteeman â€¢ will vote first robert redfield agamst sullivan second tames j kelley doubtful third henry p berÃŸen for sullivan fourth thomas f ayhrarf . '. against sullivan fifth frank venecek against sullivan sixth thomas fitigerald . . airainst sullivan seventh busene w sullivan for sullivan eighth richard mrgrath .... against sullivan ninth herman j bauler . . against sullivan tenth john haderlein against sullivan the victory for anti-sullivan men was the result of catching sullivan napping the national committeeman has been ac customed so long to dictating matters in the state central committee that he did not take the trouble to see that strong candi dates were nominated he allowed m c cbnlon discredited and defeated alder man to seek the place in the eighth dis trict and figured no one would oppose him in the tenth he was supporting charles a williams for a judicial nomination and overlooked the fact that mr williams would be forced to resign as a candidate for state central committeeman if nom inated williams did resign and the flght was left between ehemann and haderlein both opposed to sullivan unknown in first district the same was true in the first district where he allowed downey and ryan his henchmen to put up edward g stetson comparatively unknown without consult ing the powers in the other wards in the district the result was that robert redfield entered the race and got the support of the first ward almost to a man his personal popularity in the sec ond fourth and sixth enabled him to offset the strength of stenson and leave a margin in redfleld's invnr the gas men took herman j bauler for a joke as a candidate until the fatal step engineered by john mcgillen john f o'malley and george brennan in read ing bauler out of the party under false pretenses then they woke up and took notice and found that they had started a flght that brought the decent element of the party to the assistance of bauler the fighting alderman won a decisive vic tory and at the same time a vindication at the hands of his constituents . routed in the fifth thomas fitzgerald's victory over stephen d griffin was another crushing blow to sullivan griffin had been indorsed by the thirteenth ward organization on motion of mark sullivan brother of roger who had held the place previously fitzgerald's friends urged him to make the race against griffin and his victory was an easy one john haderlein in a public speech re cently declared himself opposed to sulli van and gave the lie to a report that he had agreed to do sullivan's bidding if he were elected when you find me taking orders from sullivan you will be pretty old he said to several of his friends i am against sullivan and will be elected state central committeeman in spite of his threats to beat me political prophets predict that with so many opposed to him from his own coun ty sullivan will be unable to organize the new state committee as he sees fit the state outside of cook county is nearly equally divided against him and it has been a requirement that he show a heavy majority in his own county before his se lection for chairman could go through charles boeschenstein is present chair man but not too enthusiastic for sullivan if the cook county antis unite with the state antis it is practically a centair-ty that the committee can be organised against him it deneen fires up steam roller to crush the bipartisans drastic discipline plank pre pared by governor and ad visers for conventions sign pledge or quit party shurtleff-lorimer forces de pleted despite victory of jackpotters executive's friends claim control speaker and his 14 republican allies are expected to bolt may aid in electing demo cratic presiding officer to get control of the next general as sembly of Illinois the forty-seventh will be the object for which governor charles s deneen and his intimate supporters will strive from now until the election in november â€” and after revised returns of thursday's primary indicate that the governor may achieve his desires for some purposes for in stance it is reasonably clear that the gov ernor and his faction will have the numerical strength to organize the next house of representatives if the republic an members go into a caucus the whole question of control of the next house hinges upon the question will the democrats and the anti-deneen members again form a combination to elect a speaker also that question suggests another could the democrats and the anti-deneen republicans form such a combination it they desired to do so answer hangs on election the answers to both questions are to some extent dependent upon the novem ber election upon the face of the primary returns however opinion is divided taking the vote for william lorimer for senator as the real test of the bi partisan strength of the last house but forty-four of the members of that combi nation have a chance to go back as the late primary returns show that is true in spite of the fact that all the leaders of the bipartisan crowd and all the more notorious of the jackpotters won their primary fights of the thirty republican members of the bipartisan combination who sought re nominations eighteen were successful and twelve failed the democrats who voted for lorimer some of whom have been accused of being sharers in the jack pot fared somewhat better than din their republican step-brothers thirty-one of them sought renominatlons and all but five were successful bipartisan returns complete the following is the tabulated result republicans who voted for lorimer and were renominated â€” apmadoc bush butts chiperfleld church curran dudgeon durfee erlckson fieldstack flannigen kleeman mcnlchols plerson shumacher shanahan shurtleff smekjal 18 republicans who voted for lorimer ans failed for renomination â€” beck brown back burgett crawford gillespie klt tleman logan price stearns troyer zinger zipf l2 democrats who voted for lorimer and were renominated â€” allison alschuler browne burns dewolf dillon fahy foster galligan gorman griffin hil ton kanally mcconnell mcguire mo laughlin morris e j murphy murray r^ey h a shephard sullivan walsh werdell wheelan r e wilson 26 democrats who voted for lorimer and failed for renomination â€” abrahams clark lantz mccollum o'brien s three back in deneen fold in the republican list are at least threa members who will not be connted in the lorimer-shurtleff column if there is an other bipartisan combination for the elec tion of speaker and the organization of the house apmadoc pierson and durfee those three have been forgiven for their vote for lorimer they did not vote for shurtleff for speaker last time and taken back into the deneen fold on probation the list therefore shows that the depend able following of speaker shurtleff in tho next session will be fifteen plus what others he may pick up of the new men to be elected this fall that following may be sufficient to make trouble or hold tho balance of power upon close votes but by deneen followers it is not regarded sufficient to make a fight for the speaker ship and the house organization governor deneen and his intimates fig ure that with their allies in Chicago they will be in absolute control of both the state conventions and it is their pur pose to use those conventions to bring even the stanch lorimer-shurtleff men into complete submission or else to jrlv them out of the party for the coming conventions the gov ernor or a friend of his has bitten platforms la those platforms will be the most drastic plank for party discipline that has ever been used to bring a flght bction to terms a be a declaration that all eandl ibr the legislature on the repub kket must give public pledges that continued on 4th page 2d column

f7 _ jfl the weather m jha Chicago and vlclnlty unsettled f l^v but generally fair weather satur fc $\ v/wf day and sunday slightly warmer y^if saturday moderate southerly jjjj vol viii no 232 a m Chicago examiner saturday Chicago september 17 1910 16 pages saturday jl want a job if lurta read the examiner help wanted ads yi>jl f sf openings of all kinds are constantly c vj s advertised in these columns call y/j v \ at examiner employment exchange j t j jr ttle can place you Â® reslrterwj in price one cent delivered by carrier c b patent offlc rmull vwwa v-i-i gq centa per month 3 indicted for $ 173,000 theft say jurors third true bill suppressed is belief fitzgerald would whisper name sims denials ' offset samuel peterson federal in quisitor in subtreasury case tells of triple accusation that the federal government asked for nd obtained from the february grand jury three secret indictments instead of two in connection with the theft of 173,000 from the Chicago subtreasury for which george w fitzgerald alone has been arrested on a belated warrant was strongly indicated yesterday when the examiner again can vassed the members of the february jury the inquiry among the grand jurors was made to further support the examiner's exclusive news published yesterday that a secret indictment had been voted against arthur r boal former currency clerk a nephew of frank c russell cashier of the gubtreasury who resigned shortly after fitzgerald was discharged from the treas ury service this was made necessary by united states attorney sims statement that only one man had been indicted and arrested technically mr sims spoke the truth only one man â€” fitzgerald has been in dicted and arrested but boal although not yet arrested was indicted so mr sims ingenuous statement while truthful was decidedly misleading the name on the third secret indictment cannot be made public at this time but several grand jurors are certain that they indicted three men for the reason that they could not be sure just who was guilty the fact of the voting of the boal indictment was confirmed from several grand jury sources peterson tells of three indictments samuel peterson of dekalb 111 a mem ber of the february grand jury was the first to telv of a third indictment in the bubtreasury rowbery i am positive there were three indict ments he said last night there was fitzgerald and boal and the third name i do not remember the reason we indicted three was because we could not be sure just who was guilty try juror heilman who will probably remember the name william p heilman was found at his home in joliet and said others may not appreciate the duties of a grand juror but i do the doings of a grand jury are not public property and i won't discuss the indictments we brought juror john whalen of waukegan said i remember indicting fitzgerald and boal but i am not sure about a third when told of juror peterson's positive statement he added come to think it over i believe there was a third indictment here are the statements of some of the other grand jurors who were seen yester frank b lambert 1525 addison street i ibelieve boal was indicted by the feb ruary grand jury of which i was a mem daniel mcgrath ottawa 111 i am fairly positive that we indicted both fitz gerald and boal upholds examiner's story burton e livingston 4212 north forty second street i will not say anything because i can't say anything that would detract from the examiner's story henry becker harvey 111 i won't deny or affirm that boal was indicted it might spoil the case besides nothing has beeu proved against fitzgerald cornelius j hyland 4104 kenmore ave nue i see sims denies it they being se cret indictments seth nurton piano iii i think there were others indicted it is hard work to remember as to most of the cases i paid little attention emil eichorst downer's grove 111 i will not deny that boal was indictea i was called down to-day for talking yes terday district attorney edwin sims was ob tlously displeased that a report of boat's indictment was abroad he said to an ex aminer reporter the government's case stands on the fitzgerald indictment no other warrants have been issued it is obviously improper for the district attorney the grand jurors or even the court to talk about an indict ment that has been marked suppressed for service all i can say is that we will go ahead with the case against fitzger at the union hotel where boal makes his home when in Chicago it was stated yesterday he was traveling for the shot well manufacturing compainy of Chicago his employers stated that he was at pres ent in san antonio texas on business for the company george w fitzgerald yesterday talked freely of the charges against him and dis cussed arthur r boal's connection with the case i was surprised to hear that there was a secret indictment out against boal mid fizgerald i never believed that he itak the 173,000 though it is true that he had a key which would give him access to my cage the man i suspect whose name i am willing to whisper to judge landis is not boal young boal was a 1,200 a year clerk runaway aeroplane mows down spectators eight injured at wisconsin state fair when hoxsey's machine flies into crowd milwaukee wls sept 16 eight persons flve women and three men were more or less seriously injured when aviator hoxsey's wright aeroplane swerved sidelong from its course above the race track and plunged into the crowd on the cement platform tiefore the grandstand at the state fair this afternoon the aviator was uninjured and the ma chine but slightly damaged it was a gust of wind from the south east that caused the accident i had bare ly left the ground when a gust of wind dented my left plane said hoxsey after the accident there was the grandstand on my right full of people and i felt the aeroplane going right into them i turned off the power and landed on the cement sidewalk in front of the grandstand where there were the fewest people the accident proves that i was right in my complaints about the poor grounds for starting and landing in the contract with the fair people it was stipulated that a proper place should be provided for me to start and land but when i came here i found that this had not been prepared the injured are r w roenitz oshxosh bruised about head j w jackson colored milwaukee left leg cut frank lynch neilsville left leg bruised i mrs john lynch delavan knee bruised and side injured miss fuller oshkosh severely bruised about head mrs sklng baraboo severe shock able to return home mrs alfred b morrison milwaukee ; struck on head and body bruised mrs john bowers corliss injured about head face and arms and perhaps inter nally 899 forgotten 20 years richard croker's lapse of memory is discovered by bank's ad ts'ew york sept 16.-there is 899.96 lying in the union square branch of the corn exchange bank waiting for richard croker of wantage england to come and take it away it has lain there unclaimed since 1890 mr croker having forgotten apparently that he possessed it the bank has sent mr croker notices to come and claim his coin bat he puid no attention to them it waft only when they published his name in thÂ«-"list of persons with unclaimed deposits in the bank that one of mr croker's sons appeared and annonnced that he would arrange to have his father make claim to the money the amount to the credit of the former tam many chieftain was the largest in the advertised list prepare u s sugar war wickersham and wise confer on drastic suit against trust new york sept 16 attorney general wiekersham and the united states dis trict attorney henry a wise had a pro longed conference this afternoon at the headquarters of the bar association con cerning it is said the complaint in an action to be brought by the government for the dissolution of the american sugar refining company this complaint will be much broader in its scope than the sherman anti-trust com plaint which was based on the civil suit for 30,000,000 damages instituted by the pennsylvania sugar refining company against the american sugar refining com pany after the closing of the philadelphia refinery lane is rate judge here grants manufacturers plea to sup plant examiners in inquiry washington d c sept 16.â€”com missioner franklin k lane has been assigned by the interstate commerce com mission to preside at the Chicago hearing in the advance freight rate cases when it is resumed monday the assignment was requested of president Taft by the Illinois manufacturers association who asked that a commissioner and not examiners be present commissioner lane stated that although it was intended by the commission to give a final hearing in the cases to remove all occasion for com plaint no would personally conduct the hearing la follette is stricken operation on senator probable out come of trip to rochester st paul minn sept 16 senator robert m la follette is suffering with an ailment that probably will require an op eration according to james a frear secretary of state of wisconsin who is in minneapolis to-day the senator will go to rochester to consult with the doc tors mayo mr frear says la follette re turned home after congress adjourned a sick man and that he then consulted phy sicians about his condition he was told that rest was all he needed and he ob tained as much as he could until he was plunged into the campaign bomb laid for kaiser explosive is found on track ahead of royal train special cable to the examiner berlin sept 16 â€” a dispatch to the morgen post from funfkirchen hungary says that a bomb was discovered yester day lying on the railroad track in front of the train bearing emperor william to the hunting lodge at mohacs it did iiot explode poet le gallienne sued by paris wife helpmeet former writer now milliner to support child asks for decree separated several years mate delayed action long contemplated following his residence in u s nbw york sept 16 richard le gal lienne the english poet who has been hying here since 1898 is being sued for divorce it is expected the case will be tried soon the information came from paris where mrs le gallienne has a mil linery shop her counsel lyle e malnn of this city to-day admitted serving the summons it is understood the suit is based on evidence gathered last december rumors regarding the poet reached his wife in paris and she had an investigation made she is the poet's second wife and was miss julie narregard of an old danish family she was married to le gallienne in 189t after the death of his first wife she had made a name as a writer but after she left the poet she went to paris with her little daughter under the name of mme fedora and opned the millinery shop child delayed wife's suit paris sept 16 mrs le gallienne was surprised when informed to-night that her suit for divorce had become known in new york she said : this is the first news i have received that legal action has been taken although i have been in consultation with my new york lawyer for some time my husband and i have been separated a number of years my only reason for not seeking a divorce before was that i wished to assure myself of legal possession of otir child who is now with me there is nothing sensational attached to the suit and noth ing secret about it i do not expect my husband to contest friends believed pair divorced the only surprise occasioned among mrs le gallienne's many friends here is that she dii not begin suit before indeed many persons believed she had divorced the poet as she had been living with htrj young daughter in paris for about six j years his first wife left him one child a daughter who is now with his relatives in england the second wife after the saparation supported this child as long as her resources permitted mrs le gallienne's brother is a leading lawyer in denmark she is beautiful and her artistic tastes have mafle her many friends here g o p snubs roosevelt colonel not invited to address na tional league's dinner new york sept 16 c01 roosevelt's name does not appear upon the list of dis tinguished guests invited to address the national republican league at its hotel astor banquet october 1 president Taft is to be the guest of honor and will de liver the only address expected from him during the new york campaign vice president sherman roosevelt's rival for temporary chairman at the saratoga con vention and william b mckinlay old guard chairman of the republican con gressional campaign committee will also speak 1 dead 19 hurt in wreck burlington and rock island trains collide head-on in missouri holt mo sept 16 h l howard a brakeman was killed and nineteen per sons injured in a head-on collision between burlington and rock island passenger trains one mile north of here at 6:30 o'clock to-night the accident occurred on a sharp down-grade curve near a bridge a high embankment prevented the en gineers from seeing the danger until their trains were almost together the engine crews saved themselves by jumping al though oil were more or less uac'iy in jured plow for title to-day champions of fnprow to battle at political mecca before 10,000 joliet 111 sept 16 william fair weather of wheatland champion plowman of the world must fight for his title to morrow entered against him in the pro fessional sweepstakes at the annual wheatland plowing match is cyrus stark former world's champion the match which is the mecca for politicians from all parts of northern Illinois will be held on the f m culver farm two miles from plain'fleld and it is expected that 10,000 persons will attend Taft raises tutors pay , , urges college increases ami yale board will accept new haven conn sept 16.â€”presi dent Taft who is a member of the yale corporation has advanced higher salaries for the university professors for years the decisive vote on the question of rais ing the salaris will be passed at the sep tember meeting of the corporation mon day president Taft will come here and register his vote in favor of the increase there seems no doubt of the passage of the measure as president hadley of the uni versilj is Â» iso lu favor of it french theater row splits Chicago 400 circular asks that mrs m h knowles and mr and mrs j w robbins be expelled chatfi eld-taylor is hit mrs j ogden armour relied on by society leader to end bitter war Chicago society circles have been thrown into a turmoil of dissension through the withdrawal of the french theater asso ciation from its connection with the al liance francaise so bitter has grown the feud that yester day angry recriminations were hurled by one faction at the other and equally bit ter counter charges were made only the immediate intervention of mrs j ogden armour acknowledged leader of chicago's 400 it is said will quell the social dis ! turbance which it is feared will divide the society set the latest development of the trouble i was announced in a circular statement sent i out in which it was said a demand would be made to have mrs mary h knowles land mr and mrs john w robbins ex pelled from the alliance francaise for good and substantial reasons the consolidation of the french theater association the french club of Chicago and the alliance francaise was termed a misfit fusion brought about through the influence of hobart c chatfleld taylor who arrogated unto himself the leader ship of french theaters others persons of social prominence are called arbitrary antocralic authoritative and bulldozing sokol denies signature this circular was purported to have been signed by dr edward sokol who jt was alleged had the backing in the charges made of mrs harry channon mrs charles spencer williamson mrs fenton b turck mrs edward k leicht mrs george b dickson and scores or others it is an unwarranted use of my name vehemently declared dr sokol i never sent out such a letter and knew nothing about it until this evening the greatest social fight swings aronnd the french theater association although tfcer-e is considerable talk of bringing back to life the french club of Chicago in op position to the alliance francaise the climax in society circles came sev eral weeks ago when mrs armour who had assisted in the support of the frencn theater refused to take any more part in the affairs of the club owing to petty bickerings director explains row one of the directors said the french theater association was facing ruin on account of wrangling among members and the mismanagement of funds not peculations several of the directors wished har mony but thought unless certain directors were retired nothing could be done a demand was made these directors be re moved it was refused then h c chatfleld-taylor mrs jefferson jackson mrs edward lowy mrs l maclntyre mrs ralph poole mrs harold g sperling and mrs elizabeth wallice handed in their resignations arthur a aldis ralph clarkson ever ett c brown mrs john c eastman colin c h fyffe lorado Taft mrs clarence s williamson and mn william s walker remained on the board of directors these persons the general understanding is are intending to reorganize the french club of Chicago in opposition to the alliance francaise ferry crew too brave inspector declares pere marquette heroes migrht hare escaped detroit mich sept 16 the men who went down on the pere marquette in lake michigan last week were too brave according to captain c h west cott of detroit supervising inspector of steamboats he returned to-day from a trip of investigation into the sinking of the car ferry they were too brave the captain said to-day they had taken every precaution to leave the ship but stuck to then posts too long the ferry left her dock the day of the disaster ap parently in the best of condition it was declared the last inspection was made in two hours showing gross negligence this is not the case as i proved the in spectors went abroad about dinner time and worked until nine anything wrong would have been discovered had the ferry been leaking we should have known it earl cast in comedy former husband of alice thaw ap pears in london next week special cable to the examiner london sept 16 the earl of yar mouth former husband of miss alice thaw and whose exploits on the stage in new york are still fresh in memory will appear at the royal court theater next week it is only a few weeks since that the actor earl appeared on the dumlu stage in the character of a lover returned from the wars his debut will be in a comedy with music entitled the pigeon house the earl will appear under the stage name of eric hope kaiser to visit russia special cable to the examiner st petersburg sept 16 the bourse gazette announces to-day that emperor william of germany will visit st peters ftg in november . mrs ogden armour mrs everett c brown j j,hill,72,says others burdenskeep him busy rail magnate on birthday declares he's in good health will not retire st paul minn sept 16 james j hill to-day is seventy-two years old i'm feeling in good health he re marked standing erect and his eyes shin ing brightly he looked to be in splendid condition some four years ago at the state capital you said that the time had come when you would shortly drop the burden that you wanted a little time left to read some books he was reminded i said it then he replied briskly but it is not my burden that makes me work it is the burden of others mr hill was at his bfflce bright and early sometimes he reaches the office after 10 o'clock practically everybody else in the building uses the elevator bat seldom mr hill he walks up and down the stairs to consult the various sieials in charge of the different departments lincoln plan derided reading law at home waste of time says scbool dean minneapolis minn sept 16 the american boy who stays up late at night after working all day to read law with hopes of emulating abraham lincoln is wasting his time said dean william pattee : of the university of minnesota law school to-day â€” by the time a boy bad read enough law at home to be admitted to the bar he would be too old to practice he said what he would gain in three years in law school he could not learn by himself in twenty even the boy who studies in the office of one of the small town lawyers is at disadvantage and would require years of constant study before he was familiar with even basic principles of law as applied to america penny lunch in school plan advocated in st i'niil to solve problem of malnutrition st paul minn sept 16 penny lunches for pupils in the st paul schools nre practically assured according to dr e a heyerdlng medical inspector of the schools who believes the system is one of the solutions of the problem of malnutri tion among school children dr meyer ding has taken up the lunch proposition with the parents and finds sentiment fa vors the plan golf ball fells woman mrs h e teed seriously injured at jackson park by wild putt mrs h e teed 301 west sixty-fourth street was struck on the head by a golf ball and severely injured yesterday after noon while sitting on a bench in jackson park edward o dase 1382 east sixty fourth street struck the ball making a wild putt gary pays largest duty judge schedules 912,000 purchases breaking record of year new york sept 16 judge elbert h gary chairman of the board of directors of the united states steel corporation who arrived on the manretanla thnrsday night declared ll',ooo in foreign purchases the largest amount declared by any steamship passenger in more than a year end df sullivan control seen with loss of cook county elects but three members of the state central committee where he has won eight in his previous contests boss caught nappingby be ing too sure of election of candidates regarded as too weak by the voters prophets call the downstate divided antis expected to cause downfall of roger aid bauler scores victory tioger c sullivan suffered the most srrere blow of his career as dictator or jiate democratic politics at the recent pri maries when the final count showed that he had elected but three members of the state central committee from cook county heretofore he has always been able to claim at least eight from the ten congres sional districts of this county of the three men elected state central eommitteemen by the sullivan forces two were without opposition these are henry p bergen of the third district and ku gene w sullivan brother of the national committeeman in the seventh the third member james j kelly has heretofore been classed as anti-sullivan but during the fight for control of the second dis trict kelley had to call on sullivan for aid with the result that thousands of dollars were poured into the district by the demo cratic boss to defeat koy d keehn list bhows sullivan's status the following list of democratic central committeemen will show just how sullivan will fare in a roll ctll district cbmmitteeman â€¢ will vote first robert redfield agamst sullivan second tames j kelley doubtful third henry p berÃŸen for sullivan fourth thomas f ayhrarf . '. against sullivan fifth frank venecek against sullivan sixth thomas fitigerald . . airainst sullivan seventh busene w sullivan for sullivan eighth richard mrgrath .... against sullivan ninth herman j bauler . . against sullivan tenth john haderlein against sullivan the victory for anti-sullivan men was the result of catching sullivan napping the national committeeman has been ac customed so long to dictating matters in the state central committee that he did not take the trouble to see that strong candi dates were nominated he allowed m c cbnlon discredited and defeated alder man to seek the place in the eighth dis trict and figured no one would oppose him in the tenth he was supporting charles a williams for a judicial nomination and overlooked the fact that mr williams would be forced to resign as a candidate for state central committeeman if nom inated williams did resign and the flght was left between ehemann and haderlein both opposed to sullivan unknown in first district the same was true in the first district where he allowed downey and ryan his henchmen to put up edward g stetson comparatively unknown without consult ing the powers in the other wards in the district the result was that robert redfield entered the race and got the support of the first ward almost to a man his personal popularity in the sec ond fourth and sixth enabled him to offset the strength of stenson and leave a margin in redfleld's invnr the gas men took herman j bauler for a joke as a candidate until the fatal step engineered by john mcgillen john f o'malley and george brennan in read ing bauler out of the party under false pretenses then they woke up and took notice and found that they had started a flght that brought the decent element of the party to the assistance of bauler the fighting alderman won a decisive vic tory and at the same time a vindication at the hands of his constituents . routed in the fifth thomas fitzgerald's victory over stephen d griffin was another crushing blow to sullivan griffin had been indorsed by the thirteenth ward organization on motion of mark sullivan brother of roger who had held the place previously fitzgerald's friends urged him to make the race against griffin and his victory was an easy one john haderlein in a public speech re cently declared himself opposed to sulli van and gave the lie to a report that he had agreed to do sullivan's bidding if he were elected when you find me taking orders from sullivan you will be pretty old he said to several of his friends i am against sullivan and will be elected state central committeeman in spite of his threats to beat me political prophets predict that with so many opposed to him from his own coun ty sullivan will be unable to organize the new state committee as he sees fit the state outside of cook county is nearly equally divided against him and it has been a requirement that he show a heavy majority in his own county before his se lection for chairman could go through charles boeschenstein is present chair man but not too enthusiastic for sullivan if the cook county antis unite with the state antis it is practically a centair-ty that the committee can be organised against him it deneen fires up steam roller to crush the bipartisans drastic discipline plank pre pared by governor and ad visers for conventions sign pledge or quit party shurtleff-lorimer forces de pleted despite victory of jackpotters executive's friends claim control speaker and his 14 republican allies are expected to bolt may aid in electing demo cratic presiding officer to get control of the next general as sembly of Illinois the forty-seventh will be the object for which governor charles s deneen and his intimate supporters will strive from now until the election in november â€” and after revised returns of thursday's primary indicate that the governor may achieve his desires for some purposes for in stance it is reasonably clear that the gov ernor and his faction will have the numerical strength to organize the next house of representatives if the republic an members go into a caucus the whole question of control of the next house hinges upon the question will the democrats and the anti-deneen members again form a combination to elect a speaker also that question suggests another could the democrats and the anti-deneen republicans form such a combination it they desired to do so answer hangs on election the answers to both questions are to some extent dependent upon the novem ber election upon the face of the primary returns however opinion is divided taking the vote for william lorimer for senator as the real test of the bi partisan strength of the last house but forty-four of the members of that combi nation have a chance to go back as the late primary returns show that is true in spite of the fact that all the leaders of the bipartisan crowd and all the more notorious of the jackpotters won their primary fights of the thirty republican members of the bipartisan combination who sought re nominations eighteen were successful and twelve failed the democrats who voted for lorimer some of whom have been accused of being sharers in the jack pot fared somewhat better than din their republican step-brothers thirty-one of them sought renominatlons and all but five were successful bipartisan returns complete the following is the tabulated result republicans who voted for lorimer and were renominated â€” apmadoc bush butts chiperfleld church curran dudgeon durfee erlckson fieldstack flannigen kleeman mcnlchols plerson shumacher shanahan shurtleff smekjal 18 republicans who voted for lorimer ans failed for renomination â€” beck brown back burgett crawford gillespie klt tleman logan price stearns troyer zinger zipf l2 democrats who voted for lorimer and were renominated â€” allison alschuler browne burns dewolf dillon fahy foster galligan gorman griffin hil ton kanally mcconnell mcguire mo laughlin morris e j murphy murray r^ey h a shephard sullivan walsh werdell wheelan r e wilson 26 democrats who voted for lorimer and failed for renomination â€” abrahams clark lantz mccollum o'brien s three back in deneen fold in the republican list are at least threa members who will not be connted in the lorimer-shurtleff column if there is an other bipartisan combination for the elec tion of speaker and the organization of the house apmadoc pierson and durfee those three have been forgiven for their vote for lorimer they did not vote for shurtleff for speaker last time and taken back into the deneen fold on probation the list therefore shows that the depend able following of speaker shurtleff in tho next session will be fifteen plus what others he may pick up of the new men to be elected this fall that following may be sufficient to make trouble or hold tho balance of power upon close votes but by deneen followers it is not regarded sufficient to make a fight for the speaker ship and the house organization governor deneen and his intimates fig ure that with their allies in Chicago they will be in absolute control of both the state conventions and it is their pur pose to use those conventions to bring even the stanch lorimer-shurtleff men into complete submission or else to jrlv them out of the party for the coming conventions the gov ernor or a friend of his has bitten platforms la those platforms will be the most drastic plank for party discipline that has ever been used to bring a flght bction to terms a be a declaration that all eandl ibr the legislature on the repub kket must give public pledges that continued on 4th page 2d column